Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Mobile network satisfaction levels decline, survey says

  LTE smartphones trickle out in Europe | Wi-Fi, small cells could disrupt mobile
 
  Computerworld Wireless Networking

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Mobile network satisfaction levels decline, survey says
As smartphones and tablets surge in number, mobile workers are less satisfied with their wireless network services, a new poll from iPass has found. Read More


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Keep your Blackberry Workforce Agile
With the rising numbers of mobile workers, today's businesses can't afford an email outage. Given the nature of the risks involved, as well as the way that wireless email is evolving, firms today need to consider the additional benefits gained by using third-party BlackBerry availability services. Read now

LTE smartphones trickle out in Europe
Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom in Germany have started selling smartphones and tablets with LTE, as European operators slowly start to expand their offerings beyond modems. Read More

Wi-Fi, small cells could disrupt mobile
The rise of mixed mobile networks of Wi-Fi, small cells and traditional base stations, a major theme of the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, may change the competitive landscape of both service providers and equipment vendors. Read More


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BYOD: There is no stopping employees' devices on your network
It used to be the IT department's answer was always no when an employee asked to use a personal device for work. IT often felt the risk was far too great to the company's network security to allow this. Insider (registration required) Read More

Altair Semiconductor finds a place among mobile innovators
Israel-based Altair Semiconductor showed off its LTE radio chips -- and the tablets and routers they're being installed in -- at a small booth at Mobile World Congress. Read More

AT&T DSL: Getting What I Pay For?
Gibbs discovered that his DSL service can start at a lower line speed than he signed up for and he's not happy. Read More

 
 
 

SHARK TANK OF THE DAY

But apparently not sticky enough

The family-owned company that this pilot fish works for is bought by a megacorp as part of a nationwide expansion -- and that leads to the need to inventory and label everything in the company. HQ's solution: stick-on labels with barcodes.

CAST YOUR VOTE IN THIS WEEK'S QUICKPOLL

Mobile World Congress 2012 revealed many emerging trends for smartphones. Which will be the most significant?

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